Search/Recent Changes
DBTropes
...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!

Inside Llewyn Davis

 Inside Llewyn Davis
type
TVTItem
 Inside Llewyn Davis
label
Inside Llewyn Davis
 Inside Llewyn Davis
page
InsideLlewynDavis
 Inside Llewyn Davis
comment
Inside Llewyn Davis is a 2013 Black Comedy/drama film directed, written and co-produced by the Coen Brothers. The story follows the titular character (Oscar Isaac), a Greenwich Village folk singer, travelling through New York and Chicago over the course of one week in 1961. Despite being a talented musician, nothing in life seems to be working out for him, and his confrontational, careless and self-destructive personality only serves to sabotage his situation further. The supporting cast includes Carey Mulligan, Justin Timberlake, John Goodman, Adam Driver and F. Murray Abraham.
 Inside Llewyn Davis
fetched
2024-04-19T07:46:26Z
 Inside Llewyn Davis
parsed
2024-04-19T07:46:26Z
 Inside Llewyn Davis
processingComment
Dropped link to BobDylan: Not a Feature - IGNORE
 Inside Llewyn Davis
processingComment
Dropped link to Foil: Not a Feature - IGNORE
 Inside Llewyn Davis
processingComment
Dropped link to ShaggyDogStory: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Inside Llewyn Davis
processingComment
Dropped link to TheOdyssey: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Inside Llewyn Davis
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_1282bf4f
type
No Celebrities Were Harmed
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_1282bf4f
comment
No Celebrities Were Harmed: Various characters are based on figures from the early 1960s folk scene. Llewyn Davis is an expy of Dave Van Ronk, and the film was inspired by his autobiography The Mayor Of MacDougal Street. Though it's worth noting that Van Ronk was quite popular and well-liked by his contemporaries, being a major influence and mentor to many upcoming folk artists, and had a fairly successful career, performing until his death in 2002 and even receiving a Lifetime Achievement Award from ASCAP in 1997, in sharp contrast to Llewyn who seems doomed to never get anywhere and die in poverty and obscurity. Al Cody is a self-styled wandering cowboy singer whose real name is revealed to be Arthur Milgrum. In this regard, he resembles Ramblin' Jack Elliott (born Elliott Charles Adnopoz), who cultivated a similar image yet came from a middle-class Brooklyn Jewish background. Troy Nelson, an idealistic, pacifistic soldier, is based on Tom Paxton. He sings the latter's hit "The Last Thing on My Mind," now a folk standard. Chicago folk impresario Bud Grossman bears considerable similarity to Albert Grossman. His venue was also called the Gate of Horn. Jim and Jean are an amalgam of various performing duos, including a (not actually married) pair of the same name. Their performance with Troy Nelson is likely a Shout-Out to Peter, Paul and Mary. Jim bears some resemblance to Paul Clayton. Bud Grossman talks about putting together a 2 guy, 1 girl group, probably another oblique reference to Peter, Paul and Mary. Elizabeth Hobby, the Appalachian singer that Llewyn heckles in the Gaslight, resembles Jean Ritchie. She is played by real-life folk singer Nancy Blake. Exaggerated with the final performer at the Gaslight. After Llewyn finishes his song, "Fare Thee Well" to a very positive response from his audience and in front of the Times, the next performer is Bob Dylan (played by an actor of the appropriate age), with his song, called "Farewell". Now, what are Llewyn's odds of being remembered?
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_1282bf4f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_1282bf4f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_1282bf4f
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_14ed6ab7
type
Does This Remind You of Anything?
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_14ed6ab7
comment
Does This Remind You of Anything?: The lyrics to "Please Mr. Kennedy" sound noticeably like an American soldier begging the President not to send him to war. Appropriate, since the film takes place just a few years before the United States' entry into the Vietnam War.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_14ed6ab7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_14ed6ab7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_14ed6ab7
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_1616e13
type
Ripped from the Headlines
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_1616e13
comment
Ripped from the Headlines: In-Universe. "Please Mr. Kennedy" is a novelty song about manned space flight, the first instances of which took place in 1961.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_1616e13
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_1616e13
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_1616e13
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_1b65dfad
type
The Cameo
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_1b65dfad
comment
The Cameo: Mike Timlin's singing voice is provided by Marcus Mumford of Mumford & Sons.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_1b65dfad
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_1b65dfad
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_1b65dfad
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_23ff95fb
type
Brutal Honesty
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_23ff95fb
comment
Brutal Honesty: Bud Grossman. After hearing Llewyn play a good, but rather academic folk song, he states, "I'm not seeing a lot of money here."
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_23ff95fb
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_23ff95fb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_23ff95fb
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_2854b56d
type
Uncertain Doom
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_2854b56d
comment
Uncertain Doom: Roland Turner has a heroin overdose and Llewyn leaves him unconscious in a car in the winter, so it's uncertain whether he survives or not.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_2854b56d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_2854b56d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_2854b56d
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_2de02182
type
Visual Title Drop
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_2de02182
comment
Visual Title Drop: It's the name of Llewyn's debut solo album. Grossman asks him to play "something from Inside Llewyn Davis".
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_2de02182
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_2de02182
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_2de02182
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_3126c34a
type
Insufferable Genius
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_3126c34a
comment
Llewyn himself. His considerable talent arguably makes him an Insufferable Genius.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_3126c34a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_3126c34a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_3126c34a
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_355007c3
type
Brilliant, but Lazy
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_355007c3
comment
Brilliant, but Lazy: Part of the tragedy of Llewyn's character. He is shown to be a great musician, but he doesn't have what it takes to make it big. His unpleasant, self-destructive and careless personality mean that his life and career are apparently caught in a cycle of mediocrity.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_355007c3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_355007c3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_355007c3
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_3a6a7b0a
type
Starving Artist
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_3a6a7b0a
comment
Starving Artist: Llewyn Davis lives a very hand-to-mouth, semi-vagrant existence crashing on the couches of acquaintances and relatives, at least those he has not completely antagonised yet.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_3a6a7b0a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_3a6a7b0a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_3a6a7b0a
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_415b3315
type
Stylistic Suck
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_415b3315
comment
Stylistic Suck: "Please Mr. Kennedy" doesn't suck, exactly, but Phil Ochs it isn't. Not only are the lyrics as corny as possible, even for 1961, but they have so many Painful Rhymes ("perhaps you'll"/"capsule", "libido"/"widow") that Llewyn can't believe someone wrote it.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_415b3315
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_415b3315
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_415b3315
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_4aa24ad9
type
I Have a Family
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_4aa24ad9
comment
I Have a Family: Invoked in "Please Mr. Kennedy", where the narrator is listing the reasons why he doesn't want to be an astronaut.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_4aa24ad9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_4aa24ad9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_4aa24ad9
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_4e3d253b
type
Downer Ending
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_4e3d253b
comment
Downer Ending: Llewyn ends the film having achieved nothing and in an even worse state than before, lying bruised and bloody in the alley and with his career doomed to amount to nothing while Bob Dylan is about to achieve the success and icon status Llewyn could've had were it not for a combination of bad luck and his own personality flaws.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_4e3d253b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_4e3d253b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_4e3d253b
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_51300dbf
type
Fat Bastard
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_51300dbf
comment
Roland Turner is an ageing, heroin-addicted jazz musician who is not afraid to be insulting in anything he says. He shows absolutely no sympathy when hearing that Llewyn's singing partner killed himself.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_51300dbf
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_51300dbf
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_51300dbf
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_5313c266
type
Bookends
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_5313c266
comment
Book Ends: The film opens and ends with Llewyn performing, and later getting beaten by a man in an alley, an event that is revealed to have taken place at the end, chronologically. Both at the beginning and end of his week, Llewyn is staying with the Gorfeins, and the audience hears a rendition of "Fare Thee Well." All this demonstrates a circular rhythm to Llewyn's life, and his feeling of being stuck in one place. On the other hand, certain details hint at things taking a step forward for the better, from things as simple as preventing the cat whose name is Ulysses from escaping, to the performance of a song that once relied on his deceased partner indicating his moving towards acceptance of his death.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_5313c266
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_5313c266
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_5313c266
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_581f6468
type
Hero of Another Story
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_581f6468
comment
Hero of Another Story: The stories not told on screen are at least as important as the one that is. The Gorfeins' cat must have experienced lots of adventures on the way home, lampshaded by his name Ulysses and the appearance of a poster for the 1963 film The Incredible Journey. This epic voyage of return stands in contrast to Llewyn's own "Shaggy Dog" Story — which is more similar to James Joyce's Ulysses. The other cat that Llewyn picks up also has an off-screen story of her own, albeit one that ends less happily. Ultimately, as pointed out in this article, the true unspoken protagonist of the whole story is Bob Dylan, who only appears at the end and is never named. He will be everything Llewyn is not, and is already making the beginning of his own "incredible journey" while Llewyn is wandering aimlessly through New York and Chicago. To add insult to injury, both Llewyn and this character's signature songs share the refrain "Fare Thee Well."
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_581f6468
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_581f6468
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_581f6468
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_59e5940e
type
AnimalMotif
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_59e5940e
comment
Animal Motif: It's subtle, Llewyn has a cat motif. He's accompanied by cat imagery and his characterisation of a couch surfer connotates with a stray cat. His wardrobe also connects to a tabby cat. Tellingly, his phone conversation with the receptionist has her mistakenly ask "Llewyn is the cat?" to underscore the parallels.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_59e5940e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_59e5940e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_59e5940e
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_5a268981
type
Three Chords and the Truth
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_5a268981
comment
Three Chords and the Truth: Lampshaded and viciously mocked by jazz musician Roland Turner.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_5a268981
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_5a268981
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_5a268981
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_5da37ab5
type
Triumphant Reprise
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_5da37ab5
comment
Could also, at the same time, be considered a kind of Triumphant Reprise: Whereas his previous attempt to play it at the Gorfeins' dinner triggered a grief-stricken rage, his performance near the end may indicate his acceptance of Mike's death.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_5da37ab5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_5da37ab5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_5da37ab5
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_60b4a128
type
The Last DJ
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_60b4a128
comment
The Last DJ: Llewyn sees himself this way, as aloof from all the phony and shallow careerism that he sees in his contemporaries like Troy Nelson. He sees any attempt even to earn enough money to settle down and start a family as "selling out," so perhaps he is just making excuses for his own failures. However, he also refuses to play for friends at a dinner party, claiming "that's just my job" — again, this may be a cover, as he's upset about being reminded of Mike.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_60b4a128
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_60b4a128
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_60b4a128
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_6ec4232f
type
Casting Gag
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_6ec4232f
comment
Casting Gag: Justin Timberlake plays a musician in a folk duo who strikes it big after going solo, while his former partner falls into obscurity after their breakup. Timberlake was a member of the popular boy band *NSYNC in his youth, and was—quite famously—the only member of the group who managed to have a successful solo career after their breakup.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_6ec4232f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_6ec4232f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_6ec4232f
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_6eeba1cb
type
Shut Up, Kirk!
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_6eeba1cb
comment
Shut Up, Kirk!: Turner, twice; when Llewyn tells him his old partner killed himself, clearly hoping it'll make him feel guilty enough to stop heckling him, Turner's only response is to make fun of Mike for jumping off the George Washington Bridge rather than the Brooklyn Bridge. When Llewyn straight-up threatens to shove Turner's cane up his own ass, Turner, completely unfazed, responds by threatening to kill him with Santeria.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_6eeba1cb
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_6eeba1cb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_6eeba1cb
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_780e2082
type
Slimeball
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_780e2082
comment
Slimeball: Pappi Corsicato. In the middle of the idealistic Village folk scene he's using the worst kind of casting couch practices.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_780e2082
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_780e2082
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_780e2082
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_7ef728b1
type
Tsundere
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_7ef728b1
comment
Tsundere: Jean never tires of putting down Llewyn and telling him what a piece of shit he is, but is still willing to let him crash at her house and even cares about what he's doing with his life.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_7ef728b1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_7ef728b1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_7ef728b1
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_80251be3
type
How We Got Here
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_80251be3
comment
How We Got Here: The first scene of Llewyn being beaten up in the alleyway behind the Gaslight chronologically takes place at the end of the film. Over the course of the film, the audience gets to know the reason for this event, as well as the identity of the act that he is sharing a billing with that evening.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_80251be3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_80251be3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_80251be3
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_8a1cd5de
type
Historical Person Punchline
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_8a1cd5de
comment
Historical Person Punchline: The musician Llewyn briefly sees at the end of the film is, naturally, Bob Dylan, whom he is both literally and figuratively opening for. The Clancy Brothers also make an appearance in an earlier scene.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_8a1cd5de
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_8a1cd5de
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_8a1cd5de
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_8b568cb7
type
Posthumous Character
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_8b568cb7
comment
Posthumous Character: Mike Timlin, Llewyn's singing partner, is revealed to have recently killed himself by jumping off the George Washington Bridge. This loss affects many of the characters in different ways, but is rarely directly addressed. It is clearly a painful memory for Llewyn, based on his behaviour at the Gorfeins'.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_8b568cb7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_8b568cb7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_8b568cb7
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_8fe6b348
type
Sir Swears-a-Lot
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_8fe6b348
comment
Sir Swearsalot: Jean becomes this in any conversation with Llewyn.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_8fe6b348
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_8fe6b348
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_8fe6b348
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_91cecc1e
type
Exaggerated Trope
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_91cecc1e
comment
Exaggerated with the final performer at the Gaslight. After Llewyn finishes his song, "Fare Thee Well" to a very positive response from his audience and in front of the Times, the next performer is Bob Dylan (played by an actor of the appropriate age), with his song, called "Farewell". Now, what are Llewyn's odds of being remembered?
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_91cecc1e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_91cecc1e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_91cecc1e
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_973d220f
type
Never My Fault
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_973d220f
comment
Never My Fault: Jean places all the blame for her adulterous pregnancy on Llewyn and lambasts him for "sleeping with other people's women," one of which is her. Llewyn lampshades this attitude, and tries to bring up the expression "it takes two to tango," but is brushed off by Jean.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_973d220f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_973d220f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_973d220f
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_9d12bbc1
type
Foreshadowing
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_9d12bbc1
comment
Foreshadowing: Llewyn is warned twice that taking his money immediately will forfeit his royalties to "Please Mr. Kennedy." It's obviously going to become a hit.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_9d12bbc1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_9d12bbc1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_9d12bbc1
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_a7f4710f
type
Mood Dissonance
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_a7f4710f
comment
Mood Dissonance: Llewyn plays a song for his father at a retirement home. He waits for a response, only to realize moments later that his father soiled himself.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_a7f4710f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_a7f4710f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_a7f4710f
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_b707726f
type
Hypocritical Humor
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_b707726f
comment
Hypocritical Humor: Roland Turner gives an extended and presumably well-practised speech about how he doesn't make threats, because if he wants to screw you up he'll just do it with his voodoo powers and you'll never know he did. Which... sounds a lot like a threat.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_b707726f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_b707726f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_b707726f
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_b9d276a
type
JerkassWithAHeartOfGold
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_b9d276a
comment
Jerkass with a Heart of Gold: Llewyn isn't without compassion, from his concern for the cat to being willing to pay for Jean's abortion. Most notably, unlike Jean or Roland Turner, Llewyn apologizes for his mistakes and genuinely feels guilty when he upsets people. This makes his failure to stop making the same mistakes over and over all the more frustrating.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_b9d276a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_b9d276a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_b9d276a
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bb18a227
type
It's All About Me
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bb18a227
comment
It's All About Me: Llewyn's main flaw. In reverse, Jean's attitude is "It's all your fault" when dealing with Llewyn.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bb18a227
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bb18a227
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bb18a227
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bc74ef27
type
Berserk Button
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bc74ef27
comment
Berserk Button: Llewyn's mere existence seems to be one to Jean. During one conversation with him, she cannot go a single sentence without calling him an asshole.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bc74ef27
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bc74ef27
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bc74ef27
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bd0230fb
type
Ambiguously Bi
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bd0230fb
comment
Ambiguously Bi: Was Mike Llewyn's partner or...partner? Certainly the depths of Llewyn's grief indicates it could have gone either way. Their duet song, which deals with the grief of a woman whose husband has died, seemingly describes Llewyn's own relationship with Mikenote â€œI had a man who was long and tall/moved his body like a cannonballâ€� — it's stated that Mike committed suicide by jumping off a bridge, and Llewyn notably alters the lyrics' genders when singing it solo for the public. When Roland Turner asks him upfront if he's queer (noting that Greenwich Village was famously a Gayborhood) he's careful to dodge the question, and when his fellow patrons engage in homophobic heckling he bitterly refuses to join in.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bd0230fb
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bd0230fb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bd0230fb
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bdf2a460
type
Tragic Dream
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bdf2a460
comment
Tragic Dream: What the whole movie is about.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bdf2a460
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bdf2a460
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_bdf2a460
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_c45c9fcd
type
Ass Shove
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_c45c9fcd
comment
Ass Shove: Eventually Llewyn has had enough of Turner.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_c45c9fcd
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_c45c9fcd
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_c45c9fcd
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_c75df49a
type
Shout-Out
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_c75df49a
comment
Shout-Out: The titular album is a reference to 1963's Inside Dave Van Ronk. Llewyn's novelty song "Please Mr. Kennedy" is a reference to the real Billboard #1 hit "Mr. Custer" by Larry Verne.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_c75df49a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_c75df49a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_c75df49a
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dbca2c99
type
Red Herring
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dbca2c99
comment
Red Herring: There are frequent story hooks that tease a shift in the plot, but they're all passed by so that the film remains a "Shaggy Dog" Story: Llewyn overcomes obstacles to get to a possible gig, but gets turned away, so the whole trip was a waste. Llewyn is tempted to visit Akron, where his former girlfriend moved with their son, but he passes on by. Llewyn's sleeping passenger slams his head on the dashboard, but he just sleeps right through it. Llewyn's senile father seems to have a breakthrough, but he was just having a bowel movement.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dbca2c99
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dbca2c99
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dbca2c99
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dca70c44
type
Reasonable Authority Figure
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dca70c44
comment
Reasonable Authority Figure: Bud Grossman has Llewyn audition for him even though he's shown up completely unannounced. And, although he doesn't think Llewyn has what it takes to be a major solo act, he offers him the possibility of being part of a trio that Grossman is putting together.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dca70c44
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dca70c44
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dca70c44
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dd891949
type
Who Writes This Crap?!
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dd891949
comment
Who Writes This Crap?!: Expressed by Llewyn before he records "Please Mr. Kennedy" with Jim.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dd891949
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dd891949
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dd891949
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dda99fa8
type
Despair Event Horizon
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dda99fa8
comment
Despair Event Horizon: Llewyn reaches this towards the end, having his dreams of stardom crushed, finding out Jean slept with Pappi to get him his last gig, visiting his dementia-ridden father, and deciding to go back to the merchant marine only to find out he doesn't have the papers and is stuck in his old way of life. When Bud tells him he should "get back together" with his old partner, not knowing that he committed suicide, Llewyn drily remarks "That's good advice."
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dda99fa8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dda99fa8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_dda99fa8
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_e4b69188
type
Very Loosely Based on a True Story
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_e4b69188
comment
Very Loosely Based on a True Story: Based on the memoir by folk artist Dave Van Ronk, The Mayor of MacDougal Street. Van Ronk ultimately had a good deal more success than Llewyn, however.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_e4b69188
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_e4b69188
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_e4b69188
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_e5fd8bc2
type
Hate Sink
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_e5fd8bc2
comment
Hate Sink: Roland Turner is a rude, vulgar, arrogant, drug-addled, and generally repulsive human being with zero redeeming value as a person, who represents what Llewyn is well on the road to becoming: a great musician condemned to a life of small-time mediocrity thanks in no small part to their awful personalities.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_e5fd8bc2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_e5fd8bc2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_e5fd8bc2
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_ea2e9f2d
type
No Ending
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_ea2e9f2d
comment
No Ending: We don't know what Llewyn does or where he goes after getting beaten up by Elizabeth Hobby's husband.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_ea2e9f2d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_ea2e9f2d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_ea2e9f2d
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_eb8ec7c8
type
Jerkass
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_eb8ec7c8
comment
Jerkass: Llewyn himself. His considerable talent arguably makes him an Insufferable Genius. Roland Turner is an ageing, heroin-addicted jazz musician who is not afraid to be insulting in anything he says. He shows absolutely no sympathy when hearing that Llewyn's singing partner killed himself. Also Jean with her Never My Fault worldview, cheating on Jim (who is obviously a square but doesn't do anything otherwise to deserve the treatment), constant belittling of Llewyn and forcing him to pay for an abortion on his own when he is near penniless.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_eb8ec7c8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_eb8ec7c8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_eb8ec7c8
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_f3fd818b
type
Dark Reprise
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_f3fd818b
comment
Dark Reprise: Llewyn plays "Fare Thee Well," which had been his signature duet with Mike Timlin, one last time at the end of the film, with a more subdued presence and different, lonelier lyrics. Could also, at the same time, be considered a kind of Triumphant Reprise: Whereas his previous attempt to play it at the Gorfeins' dinner triggered a grief-stricken rage, his performance near the end may indicate his acceptance of Mike's death.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_f3fd818b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_f3fd818b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_f3fd818b
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_f6b5441c
type
Right in Front of Me
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_f6b5441c
comment
Right in Front of Me: Llewyn, when recording "Please Mr. Kennedy":
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_f6b5441c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_f6b5441c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_f6b5441c
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_f9f2c33
type
Running Gag
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_f9f2c33
comment
Running Gag: Jean calling Llewyn an "asshole." Almost a Verbal Tic.
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_f9f2c33
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_f9f2c33
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_f9f2c33
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_name
type
ItemName
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_name
comment
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Inside Llewyn Davis / int_name
 Inside Llewyn Davis / int_name
itemName
Inside Llewyn Davis

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Films of 2010–2014 / int_88b48826
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Historical Person Punchline / int_88b48826
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Starving Artist / int_88b48826
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
The '60s / int_88b48826
 Inside Llewyn Davis
hasFeature
Visual Title Drop / int_88b48826